I am posting here an article that generated media interest the last two days with the headline ‘Green algae’
When I first reviewed what work was been reported on regarding the processing of cellulose I came away rather pessimistic. What makes it so enticing is the fact that cellulose is a string of glucose molecules tightly tied together. In other words, all the wood in a tree is on one level, pure glucose. What is also wonderfully obvious is that Mother Nature did a great job keeping it all together. It was not going to be solved by something easy.
Since then I reported that a research group was studying how termites pulled it off with the idea of isolating the right enzymes. It was nice to see this promising work started. It will surely take years to produce a viable protocol out of this form of basic research.
Now we have work commenced on a well known fungus with a previous history of converting cellulose into simple sugars. This appears most promising of all since a lot of prior work has gone into this particular fungus.
It is suddenly no longer far fetched to envisage grinders chewing up corn stover and the like to be fed into a continuous process vat in which the sweetened fluids are drawn off to the fermenter. This technology surely lends itself to small scale processing operations.
This is a potential protocol that can be adapted to the farm gate with very little fresh labor input and would add a useful new revenue stream beside internalizing the energy needs.
In a paper published today in Nature Biotechnology, researchers led by Los Alamos National Laboratory and the U.S. Department of Energy Joint Genome Institute announced that the genetic sequence of the fungus Tricoderma reesei has uncovered important clues about how the organism breaks down plant fibers into simple sugars. The finding could unlock possibilities for industrial processes that can more efficiently and cost effectively convert corn, switchgrass and even cellulose-based municipal waste into ethanol. Ethanol from waste products is a more-carbon-neutral alternative to gasoline.
When I first reviewed what work was been reported on regarding the processing of cellulose I came away rather pessimistic. What makes it so enticing is the fact that cellulose is a string of glucose molecules tightly tied together. In other words, all the wood in a tree is on one level, pure glucose. What is also wonderfully obvious is that Mother Nature did a great job keeping it all together. It was not going to be solved by something easy.
Since then I reported that a research group was studying how termites pulled it off with the idea of isolating the right enzymes. It was nice to see this promising work started. It will surely take years to produce a viable protocol out of this form of basic research.
Now we have work commenced on a well known fungus with a previous history of converting cellulose into simple sugars. This appears most promising of all since a lot of prior work has gone into this particular fungus.
It is suddenly no longer far fetched to envisage grinders chewing up corn stover and the like to be fed into a continuous process vat in which the sweetened fluids are drawn off to the fermenter. This technology surely lends itself to small scale processing operations.
This is a potential protocol that can be adapted to the farm gate with very little fresh labor input and would add a useful new revenue stream beside internalizing the energy needs.
In a paper published today in Nature Biotechnology, researchers led by Los Alamos National Laboratory and the U.S. Department of Energy Joint Genome Institute announced that the genetic sequence of the fungus Tricoderma reesei has uncovered important clues about how the organism breaks down plant fibers into simple sugars. The finding could unlock possibilities for industrial processes that can more efficiently and cost effectively convert corn, switchgrass and even cellulose-based municipal waste into ethanol. Ethanol from waste products is a more-carbon-neutral alternative to gasoline.
The fungus T. reesei rose to dubious fame during World War II when military leaders discovered it was responsible for rapid deterioration of clothing and tents in the South Pacific. Named after Dr. Elwyn T. Reese, who, with colleagues, originally isolated the hungry fungus, T. reesei was later identified as a source of industrial enzymes and a role model for the conversion of cellulose and hemicellulose—plant fibers--into simple sugars.
The organism uses enzymes it creates to break down human-indigestible fibers of plants into the simplest form of sugar, known as a monosaccharide. The fungus then digests the sugars as food. Researchers decoded the genetic sequence of T. reesei in an attemptto discover why the deep green fungus was so darned good at digesting plant cells. The sequence results were somewhat surprising. Contrary to what one might predict about the gene content of a fungus that can eat holes in tents, T. reesei had fewer genes dedicated to the production of cellulose-eating enzymes than its counterparts.
"We were aware of T. reesei's reputation as producer of massive quantities of degrading enzymes, however we were surprised by how few enzyme types it produces, which suggested to us that its protein secretion system is exceptionally efficient," said Los Alamos bioscientist Diego Martinez (also at the University of New Mexico), the study's lead author. The researchers believe that T. reesei's genome includes "clusters" of enzyme-producing genes, a strategy that may account for the organism's efficiency at breaking down cellulose. On an industrial scale, T. reesei could be employed to secrete enzymes that can be purified and added into an aqueous mixture of cellulose pulp and other materials to produce sugar. The sugar can then be fermented by yeast to produce ethanol.
"The sequencing of the Trichoderma reesei genome is a major step towards using renewable feedstocks for the production of fuels and chemicals," said Joel Cherry, director of research activities in second-generation biofuels for Novozymes, a collaborating institution in the study. "The information contained in its genome will allow us to better understand how this organism degrades cellulose so efficiently and to understand how it produces the required enzymes so prodigiously. Using this information, it may be possible to improve both of these properties, decreasing the cost of converting cellulosic biomass to fuels and chemicals."